Prevention

Preventative Care. Dr. David Samadi will explore the new and often debated areas of preventative care. Prevent cancer, check your blood pressure, eat the right foods and other prevention tips. Get a medical doctor's take on herbal treatments, yoga, homeopathy, acupuncture, vitamins, supplements, massage therapy, spiritual treatment and other forms of alternative therapy for prevention.

YOUR CARE

Allergies are a condition in which the immune system reacts abnormally to a foreign substance – such as pollen, mold or pet dander. When our bodies come into contact with allergens, our immune system’s antibodies work to identify what is causing those pesky symptoms like watery, itchy eyes; sneezing, sniffling, wheezing and rashes.

How Allergies Start

Allergens can enter our bodies in a few different ways, however, but the most common way is by inhalation into the nose and lungs. Allergens are often inhaled via airborne pollens of certain trees, grasses, weeds, house dust — including dust mite particles — mold spores, or cat and dog dander.

While they may be uncomfortable, these antigens are not actually harmful, but the body’s immune system thinks they are. Therefore, allergies are actually a result of the immune system’s mistaken response to a harmless substance.

Spring Season 2015: Worst Allergy Season

With spring just around the corner, allergens will soon be more prevalent given the warmer weather, causing the airborne allergen levels to rise. In turn, if you have allergies, your symptoms will soon be flaring up.

Spring Season Allergy Tips

So how can you best prepare yourself for the upcoming allergy season? Here are some tips:

Start taking allergy medications as soon as possible. They often work best when started before the symptoms begin. Some over-the-counter antihistamines that may be helpful include:

Allegra

Benadryl

Claritin

Zyrtec (certirizine)

Over-the-counter medications that have a “D” tacked on the end, like Allegra-D, Claritin-D, and Zyrtec-D, are a combination of antihistamine and decongestant to relieve both allergies and congestion.

If you’re not into taking medication, there are other things you can try:

Stay indoors during peak pollen hours. (Know what the pollen count is.) Close windows, turn the air conditioning on to help decrease allergy symptoms.

Protect your eyes. Wear a hat that blocks your face or wear sunglasses to prevent pollen and molds from getting into your eyes.

Avoid hair products – they attract pollen.

Shower daily to wash any pollen, mold or animal dander out of your hair and off of your skin.

For those with severe allergies, shots given by a doctor around once a month and prescription sublingual tablets also exist as more lasting alternatives. The aim of these is to improve a patient’s tolerance of allergy triggers – thus relieving the symptoms allergies cause.